Chicago Sun-Times

U. S. women’s hockey team holds firm as deadline passes

- Kevin Allen, Christine Brennan and A. J. Perez

A 5 p. m. ET deadline Thursday set by USA Hockey expired. The women’s national hockey team’s threatened boycott of the Internatio­nal Ice Hockey Federation World Championsh­ips didn’t.

Two- time Olympian Jocelyne Lamoureux- Davidson told USA TODAY Sports that none of the 23 players on the roster came off their vow to skip the world championsh­ips as they seek better wages and other support from USA Hockey. USA Hockey had establishe­d the deadline ahead of the tournament, set to begin at month’s end. “I don’t think any of us even flinched,” Lamoureux- Davidson said. “We saw this as a formality.”

John Langel, the lawyer representi­ng the players, told USA TODAY Sports there has been no communicat­ion with USA Hockey since the players went public Wednesday.

“I thought they would have sat down and talked so we could make some meaningful progress,” Lamoureux- Davidson said. “They just put a press release out, set this deadline, and now will go out and try to field a team.”

Dave Ogrean, executive director of USA Hockey, told USA TODAY Sports on Wednesday that the USA will present a team for the world championsh­ips in Plymouth, Mich., although it’s not clear who will be on that squad.

Lamoureux- Davidson said that won’t be easy since the national team members have been in touch with their potential replacemen­ts. “We have the support of NCAA coaches and the NWHL ( National Women’s Hockey League),” she said. “I think they are going to have a hard time finding players who want to represent the U. S.”

The women and USA Hockey are so far apart in negotiatio­ns that they can’t even agree on how much financial sup- port the players are receiving from the governing body.

Players say they receive $ 1,000 a month for six months from USA Hockey before an Olympic Games, and USA Hockey officials say core players receive $ 3,000 a month. USA Hockey’s figure includes $ 2,000 a month that comes from the U. S. Olympic Committee’s Direct Athlete Support program. Some athletes receive only $ 700 from that program.

The two sides haven’t said how far apart they are in negotiatio­ns. At the 2014 Olympics, USA Hockey officials say the U. S. women had the potential to earn $ 53,000. But that total included the USOC training stipend and projected the USA winning gold and receiving a bonus of $ 25,000 from the USOC. USA won silver and received $ 15,000.

U. S. players say the vast majority of their financial support comes from the USOC, not USA Hockey, which they view as a lack of commitment to women’s hockey. That’s a charge that USA Hockey officials vehemently deny.

“We have taken their interests seriously and put up a more substantia­l stipend and package on the table coming up to the Olympic year,” Ogrean said this week.

Now, USA Hockey officials say they are offering a deal that would allow players the opportunit­y to pocket $ 85,000 if they win the gold medal. But a chunk of that increase comes from the fact that the USOC has raised the gold medal bonus to $ 37,500.

By comparison, in 2016, USA Swimming gave star Katie Ledecky $ 75,000 for each gold in addition to the $ 25,000 that she received from the USOC for each gold.

 ?? TOM SZCZERBOWS­KI, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? U. S. players such as left wing Hilary Knight say they won’t play in the upcoming world championsh­ips.
TOM SZCZERBOWS­KI, USA TODAY SPORTS U. S. players such as left wing Hilary Knight say they won’t play in the upcoming world championsh­ips.

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